Here's where all the money went during the offseason, and the payoff for
the Diamondbacks should be immediate: they won't rank nearly this low in
runs allowed in 1999. All the
newcomers are likely to perform well, with the caveat that Armando
Reynoso is as fragile as they come, and was probably an extraneous
pickup, since it forced Brian Anderson into the pen. Buck Showalter has
gotten into the habit of sticking with his starting pitchers for as long
as possible, and after last winter's shopping spree, that should be even
more noticeable in 1999.

That's good news for the bullpen, which has also been improved. I don't
buy the Gregg Olson Comeback quite yet, so one of the newcomers (John
Frascatore? Darren Holmes?) could be the closer soon. Anderson will be a
wasted talent in long relief, Swindell has fashioned a new career for
himself as a lefty out of the pen who can pitch consecutive innings, and
Amaury Telemaco was successful as both a starter and a reliever last year.

The Diamondbacks replaced Devon White, their major defensive offseason
defector, with Steve Finley, an excellent center fielder in his own
right. Jay Bell has taken well to the move to second base, and Matt
Williams is solid. Travis Lee is an outfield-quality defensive player
playing at first base. On the down side, Luis Gonzalez is not the player
he once was, and who knows what "outfielder" Tony Womack is
going to do when he comes off the DL?

The Rox' starting pitching was again unterrible in 1998 when you get that
home field factor out of the numbers. Hopefully, new manager Jimmy
Leyland will go easier on Jamey Wright and John Thompson's arms than he
did with his young charges in Florida. Wright especially needs to take a
big step up this year for the Rockies to have a chance at the division.
Kile's season was fairly predictable, and not really bad, in 1998; look
for more of the same from him. The big question mark in the rotation is
import Brian Bohanon; coming off a career year in a couple of pitcher's
parks, he's an early candidate for Biggest Flop Signing in 1999.

The bullpen remains the cornerstone of this team. Leyland is comfortable
with the closer-by-committee setup that the team is obviously suited for;
Dave Veres is probably their best reliever and is coming off a strong
1998, but look for the saves to be spread around. Expect Leyland to use
the pen less than Don Baylor did last year; Curt Leskanic, in particular,
may benefit from working fewer innings. Overall, an excellent group.

The defense isn't as good as you'd like in a park as unforgiving as Coors
Field, but it could be worse. At his best, Fonzie Bichette was a DH with
a strong arm, and he's years and pounds away from that. Walker remains
strong, and Darryl Hamilton still covers ground in center. Infield
defense is solid enough with Neifi Perez at short, Vinny Castilla at
third, and Todd Helton at first. Mike Lansing, who had problems with his
back last year, appears to be healthy again.

Peter Gammons is right in noting that the Dodgers have six starters, but
are they really six good starters? For the most part, yes. The
rotation benefits from pitching in Chavez Ravine, but they are the best
in the division top to bottom no matter where they pitch. If Davey
Johnson is careful with Darren Driefort, he'll be rewarded in spades,
provided that Johnson sticks around longer than a couple of years.

Jeff Shaw's a good closer, Rojas and Osuna should have fine years
themselves, and Dave Mlicki has the potential to be one of the best long
relievers in the league (if he isn't starting). The Dodgers picked some
interesting lefties for the pen; Borbon is coming off a major elbow
operation, and Masaoka is a converted minor-league starter. It's
heartening that Greg Cadaret and Chris Haney were deep-sixed; less so
that Jeff Kubenka failed to make the team, and that's not just because I
own him in Scoresheet.

The Dodgers are another team with strengths that effectively cancel out
their weaknesses defensively. Devon White remains great in center, and
helps make up for Gary Sheffield's
borderline incredible indifference. Adrian Beltre should develop into a
fine third baseman, but he's not there yet. If Mark Grudzielanek starts
at short, prepare for some errant throws and 5.5 grounders this season.
Eric Young doesn't have great range but is solid on the pivot, and Karros
is of similar quality at first.

You can't take much more of a hit to your starting five than to lose
someone like Kevin Brown. The Padres sport a rotation that could be
potentially very solid, but has question marks throughout. Was Andy
Ashby's 1998 for real? (Probably.) How about Sterling Hitchcock? (He's
likely going to take a big step forward; he was on cruise control in the
playoffs.)
Woody Williams doesn't have the tools Joey Hamilton does, but he pitches
less indifferently than Hamilton, so that's a plus. Clement is a great
prospect, while Spencer is an interesting experiment. Nevertheless, with
the loss of Brown, the Padres rotation obviously won't be as good as it
was last year.

Trevor Hoffman is as steady as they come in the bullpen, but both Donne
Wall and Dan Miceli stand to slide from their excellent 1998 campaigns.
Randy Myers probably is not long for San Diego, and leaves the Padres
without an experienced lefty in the bullpen while he's on the DL. Look
for Brian Boehringer to get more work from Bruce Bochy this year; his
control can't get much worse, and he should respond well.

The defense in San Diego improved with the offseason moves the team made.
New third baseman George Arias exhibits the range, if not the arm, of Ken
Caminiti in his prime. Gomez, Veras and Joyner round out a capable
infield. Tony Gwynn's range is worse than Silverchair's music at this
point in his career, but at least he was good once. Ruben Rivera and
Reggie Sanders are fine defenders at the other outfield spots.

It could turn into a firestorm of runs scored by opposing teams in the
Bay Area this season, with the Giants' staff battling age and
ineffectiveness. Shawn Estes has excellent stuff, but
his control was a joke last year after being solid in 1997. Since 1997
was the outlier, he may be in for another long season. Rueter is
underpowering but solid, and Gardner had a good year last year.
Unfortunately, he's 37. Russ Ortiz has a future, but he wasn't compatible
with major league pitching in his trial last season; we may have to wait
for version 2.0. Opposing batters lick their chops when Chris Brock is
scheduled to start, so look for the Giants to make a move for a starter
or take a look at prospect Jason Grilli before too long.

Dusty Baker works his pen hard, and they respond well, year after year,
although some of their guys wear out by August. This year's model
shouldn't be any different. Closer Robb Nen probably can't do what he did
last year, but he's an excellent nonetheless. Alan Embree will probably grab
most of Julian Tavarez' innings after the latter's subpar season in 1998.
Newcomer Felix Rodriguez is all bark and no bite, and Baker won't put up
with his wild ways for long.

Defensively, the Giants have a very strong team, with only second baseman
Jeff Kent perceptibly below average. Third baseman Bill Mueller is very
smooth around the bag when his
toe isn't broken, and the outfield of Bonds, Benard and Burks should
cover a lot of ground.